House · Services · Families · Leaving the UK after non-dom
Families · the end of UK non-dom

The non-dom regime has closed. Leave the UK so it does not follow you.

From April 2025 the old domicile regime in the United Kingdom is replaced by a residence-based one. For many families it now costs more to stay than to leave. But leaving must also be done correctly — otherwise the UK tax tail stays with you for years. The House plans the exit in advance.

When this is your situation

What the House does

Leaving the UK is not buying a ticket — it is a sequence of steps with the right timing. The House works them out in advance: when to break residence, what to do with the trust before you go, where to land, and how to close reporting on both sides.

What you get: a timeline for breaking UK residence on the presence test · a read of the FIG window and rebasing · a rebuilt foreign trust · a new footing (residence, bank, holding) · reporting across 2 sides

Why this way and not another

In advance, not in the final year
exit timing is calculated before the worldwide base accrues
A clean break of residence
the UK releases you on its own presence rules, with no grey zones
The trust is not forgotten
the foreign structure is rebuilt for the new rules before you leave
A settled position
a fixed mandate and a full stop instead of open-ended risk
What stands in the way today

What worries you — and the House’s answer

Where this leads

You leave the UK to a plan: residence broken cleanly, transitional rules used, trust rebuilt, the new footing in place. No United Kingdom tax tail follows you. The family’s wealth is moved into a form that holds under the new rules — and the ones after them.

Mandate
from $15,000
Depends on the trust and the number of jurisdictions. It begins with a Diagnostic, which is credited against the mandate fee.
Leaving on time costs less than staying.
Begin with a Diagnostic for this service

The Diagnostic is credited against the mandate fee. A reply within one business day.

or — a private word with an adviser →